We broke open Breaky Bottom!

14.06.2010
A bunch of walk­ers from as far away as Dorset and the Chilterns walked the for­bid­den Access Land site of Breaky Bot­tom farm and vine­yard, near Rod­mell, East Sus­sex, on Sat­ur­day.

And they said “two fin­gers to the self­ish landown­er who wish­es to remove a right of access that has tak­en 130 years to secure”.

14.06.2010
A bunch of walk­ers from as far away as Dorset and the Chilterns walked the for­bid­den Access Land site of Breaky Bot­tom farm and vine­yard, near Rod­mell, East Sus­sex, on Sat­ur­day.

And they said “two fin­gers to the self­ish landown­er who wish­es to remove a right of access that has tak­en 130 years to secure”.

They had with them Kate Ash­brook, Gen. Sec. of the Open Spaces Soci­ety and doughty fight­er against Nicholas Hoogstraten’s foot­path stop­ping antics, and Mar­i­on Shoard, the author whose books high­light­ing the destruc­tion of the coun­try­side and the inequities of landown­er­ship have turned around the pol­i­tics of the coun­try­side in the last gen­er­a­tion. Six­ty walk­ers and their chil­dren, with folk from the Ram­blers Asso­ci­a­tion, *Red Rope, and The Land Is Ours, watched as we sym­bol­i­cal­ly fenced the steep slope of a tiny chalk pit which the landown­er has been using as his excuse for exclud­ing the pub­lic from this statu­to­ry Access Land site. We dec­o­rat­ed the new fence with our rib­bons, ban­ners and plac­ards.

Despite own­ing ‘the most fenced farm on the entire South Downs’, with every tiny pad­dock and vine row fenced or hedged, this landown­er so far refus­es to fence this chalk pit because its pres­ence as a safe­ty haz­ard con­sti­tutes the excuse he needs to secure a Restric­tion Order for­bid­ding us access to this ancient flow­ery pas­ture.

Kate Ash­brook in her speech said: “It is out­ra­geous that we are banned from this love­ly site. The Access Land on the Downs is piti­ful­ly sparse in any case. Breaky Bot­tom is the entry point to a delight­ful but very under-used part of the Downs, and is only a short dis­tance from the South Downs Way.

All the landown­er need­ed to do was to put about 70 metres of fencing[v]around the quar­ry to com­ply with the require­ments for mak­ing
Access Land safe for the pub­lic”.

Mar­i­on Shoard called for “a right of respect­ful access every­where in the coun­try­side, as already exists in Scotland[vi].”
Dave Bangs, of Action For Access, said “The landown­er wants his right to pri­va­cy, even though he already lives in one of the remotest and most under-vis­it­ed parts of the South Downs. Yet what about the rights to enjoy the coun­try­side and nature which all those mil­lions of us cooped up in our cities, towns and vil­lages need for our health and recre­ation ? Wealth and land own­er­ship should not be what deter­mines our right to enjoy the coun­try­side.”

Our cam­paign is deter­mined to return and return again to Breaky Bot­tom until we see Lewes Dis­trict Coun­cil and Nat­ur­al Eng­land secure the per­ma­nent fenc­ing of this lit­tle chalk pit and the con­se­quent re-open­ing of this site to pub­lic access.

——————————

The cam­paign for the right to roam has been going since the 1880–90s and the first Par­lia­men­tary Bill was put for­ward by James Bryce in 1884. In 2000 the CROW Act (Coun­try­side and Rights of Way Act) was passed, which gave walk­ers a lim­it­ed right of access over ‘moun­tain, moor, heath, down and com­mon’. In prac­tice the amount of Access Land on the South Downs increased by only 2 %. Breaky Bot­tom was one of the ‘pre­cious frag­ments’ of old Down­land which was giv­en this statu­to­ry right of access.

Action for Access
action4access@googlemail.com